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This article is about how to make a complete art assets list of an iOS game. This list is for the art team to work out things, and for calculating the art budget.

Think about a simple alien-shooting game, it has a start screen, which have these buttons: “play game”, “option”, etc. And a single game play screen, a top-down view in which a soldier shoots aliens. And of course, some “achievement” and “credit” screens.

The basic idea is to break down the whole game to elements, and then make a complete list.

First have a look at the start screen, it has background image, game logo, “play game”, “options”, “Credit”, “More games…”, perhaps some animations.

And let us see the game play screen, we may need a background, some foreground graphics, the soldier with 5 animations(walk, idle, fire, hurt, die), a few types of aliens also with some animations, a few interactive objects, like wood crate, garbage cans, and some VFX for blast, blood splash, bullets…

As we’ve dealt with the game start screen, list every item in the spreadsheet. For example:

Soldier walking animation:

1. Item code: Ani-SD01-walk

2.Item name: soldier-walk

3. Asset category: animation

4. Specification: 32 frames, loopable, FPS=16

5. Pixel size: 120x120

6. Price: $xx

Continue, until you have listed all the items in all the game screens. To this point, congratulations! You’ve got a full list of art assets for your game!

If you hire an art contractor to do all the assets, you can leave the Price entry of every item for him to fill.